Synopsis
The Hundred Family Surnames is a traditional Chinese primer collecting hundreds of Chinese surnames in four-character verses for children learning to read.
Overview
The Hundred Family Surnames (Bai Jia Xing) is one of China's most famous literacy primers for children. Together with the Three Character Classic and the Thousand Character Classic, it forms the Three Hundred Thousand collection of traditional Chinese educational texts. The book collects over 500 Chinese surnames, arranged in four-character verses for easy memorization by children.
The Hundred Family Surnames was compiled during the early Northern Song Dynasty (10th century). The author is unknown, but it is believed to be from the Wu-Yue region. The opening Zhao, Qian, Sun, Li reflects this: Zhao was the imperial surname of the Song Dynasty, and Qian was the surname of the Wu-Yue king Qian Liu.
Historical Origins
Chinese surname culture traces back to ancient tribal times. According to historical records, Chinese surnames originally derived from tribal totems, fiefdom names, official titles, and occupations.
| Surname Origin | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| State/Fiefdom | Named after feudal state | Zhao, Wei, Han |
| Official Title | Named after government position | Sima, Situ, Sikong |
| Occupation | Named after profession | Tao, Tu, Bu |
| Ancestor Name | Named after ancestor | Kong, Zhuang, Qu |
| Tribal Totem | Named after tribal symbol | Long, Xiong, Ma |
Classic Opening
Zhao, Qian, Sun, Li. Zhou, Wu, Zheng, Wang. Feng, Chen, Chu, Wei. Jiang, Shen, Han, Yang.
Top Surnames by Population
According to China's Ministry of Public Security, the top ten surnames are:
| Rank | Surname | Approx. Population |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wang | ~105 million |
| 2 | Li | ~101 million |
| 3 | Zhang | ~95 million |
| 4 | Liu | ~72 million |
| 5 | Chen | ~65 million |
| 6 | Yang | ~46 million |
| 7 | Huang | ~44 million |
| 8 | Zhao | ~37 million |
| 9 | Wu | ~34 million |
| 10 | Zhou | ~32 million |
Cultural Significance
Surnames hold deep significance in Chinese culture, representing family lineage and bloodline continuation. Chinese names consist of a surname plus given name, reflecting family culture and expectations for the next generation. In overseas Chinese communities, retaining Chinese surnames is an important way of maintaining cultural identity.
References
- Baidu Baike: Bai Jia Xing
- Wikipedia: Hundred Family Surnames
- China Ministry of Public Security: National Surname Report
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